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[Amblyomma spp.] [Dermacentor spp.] [Ixodes spp.]
[Ornithodoros spp.] [Rhipicephalus spp.] |
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Life cycle of the two-host ixodid (hard)
ticks. The adult is considered the diagnostic stage, as
identification to the species level is best achieved with adults.
An example of an ixodid tick of public health concern with this life
cycle is Hyalomma marginatum, a vector of Crimean-Congo viral
hemorrhagic fever.
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Two-host ixodid ticks have a life cycle that usually spans
over two years. Gravid females drop off the second host after feeding to lay eggs
,
usually in the fall. Eggs hatch into six-legged larvae
and overwinter in this stage. The following spring, the larvae seek
out and attach to the first host
,
usually a rodent or lagomorph. The larvae molt into nymphs on the
first host
-
.
Engorged nymphs drop off the first host, usually in the late summer or fall
and overwinter in the nymphal stage. Nymphs molt into adults the
following spring
and seek out the second host
,
which is usually a larger herbivore (bovids, cervids, etc). Adults
feed on the second host during the summer and mate. In the fall,
females drop off the second host to continue the cycle. Females may
reattach and feed multiple times. Humans may
serve as first or second hosts for ticks with this life cycle. Also,
the second host does not necessarily have to be a separate species, or even
a separate individual, as the first host.
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